I don't know anyone who enjoys pulling weeds. Do you?
In the orchard area, we simply lay down cardboard, rough compost, and straw/hay every fall. We are still conditioning the soil in that area from hard, compacted, clay soil. We sow orchard grass seeds in the spring, and deer forage in the fall. We've tilled it all under once. Each year the weeds we don't want grow less and less as the plants we do want produces more and chokes out the weeds. Our orchard area is 1/4 acre of terraced hillside dropping a total of 300 ft. There's no way I'm hand pilling unwanted weeds there.
My 2020 garden experiment |
In our summer garden in front of our house, we are trying something new I saw on YouTube, landscape fabric. I know we've tried it before with little to no success, but we'll be trying a different tactic, as Living Traditions homestead does. To try it out, I bought a heavy duty landscape fabric like they did. It's 4'x50' and much heavier than we've used before. After Dave's grandson tilled the garden, we let the rains settle the soil a bit. We laid two 25' rows of the weed cloth down. We pinned it down about every 8"-12" and overlapped the edges about 6," I burned holes in the fabric every 2' for the transplants to go in. So it looks like this. The black area is the landscape fabric. I'll put 6 cattle panels anchored by T-posts between the two rows of tomatoes to support them. I'll also be putting a drip hose line between the rows and on the outside edges, so 3 lines total.
For the other two rows of Roma tomatoes, I'll do it the same way I
always have. If this works, I'll buy more landscape fabric for the other
areas of the garden. This should make it easier to work smarter, not
harder in the future. None of us are getting any younger. FYI (for your
information), I rotate where I plant my vegetables every two years. I
planted my tomatoes where my 3 sisters row is in 2018. I planted them a
foot apart and that was way too close together so this year I'm giving
them 2'. Even after all these years of organic gardening, I'm still trying new things to make it better, There's no absolutely right way to garden. You can read dozens of books but until you get your hands dirty, get out there, and do it, you'll never find what works for you. You take the basic principle, tweak it, and make it your own.
The only bit of bad news is that our last remaining angora died. I believe the same parasite that killed Buddy Baby was the reason. So we are out of the rabbit fiber business. There goes my instantly usuable rabbit poo tea and time release fertilizer. Well, we've got plenty of chicken manure. It'll just have to be composted first.
Y'all have a blessed day!
Cockeyed Jo
I hope it works for you. Nobody enjoys pulling weeds. My experience with landscape cloth was a disaster, but then, I was trying to eradicate wire grass, which merely laughed at the landscape fabric.
ReplyDeleteI'm sorry to hear about your last bunny. I take it you aren't going to get any more?
Leigh, The weed barrier I bought is guaranteed life for 7 years use and is much thicker than any I've used before so I'm hopeful. The soda boxes and wood chips worked well for two seasons for the perimeter border so will do it again this year. As for rabbits not angoras. Maybe meat rabbits again (for me) in the future.
DeleteI was a pretty good gardener until I moved to the southern u.s. There's Bermuda grass which roots underground with runners and comes up everywhere and you can't kill it unless you use pesticides which I won't do so I am trying container gardening. They have lots of bugs here too that I've never had a problem with before but when you're a gardener you keep coming back! LOL! I hope your fabric works!
ReplyDeleteSam, I hate the Bermuda grass almost as much as the sand dollar weeds. I'm thankful we have neither here.
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